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Quick-maturing Vegetable Varieties
Filed under: Quick Crops, Tagged as: gardening tips, how to grow, Quick crops
Most vegetables include cultivars or varieties that are quicker-maturing than others. Quick-maturing vegetable crops come to harvest in as little as 4 to 10 weeks. They are not "long stayers" in the garden.
Use quick-maturing crops to your advantage:
• Succession cropping. Rather than sowing or planting the crops you want to eat all at once, space them out over time so that your harvest is continuous, not a glut. Quick-maturing crops planted every two weeks in succession will keep your garden producing through the season. When the first sowing appears above the ground, make the next sowing.
• Intercropping matches a quick-maturing crop with a slower maturing crop. At planting time place a quick-maturing crops next to a slower-maturing crop. While you wait for "long stayers" such as leeks, parsnips, salsify, potatoes, and onions from seed to come to harvest, quick-maturing crops will be in and out of the garden and on the table.
• Catch cropping fills space and production gaps in the garden. Sometimes--often at midsummer--crops come out of the garden for one unexpected reason or another: pest or disease damage, animal damage or loss. Fill the gap with a quick-maturing crop. Quick-maturing crops can go into the garden late and still come to harvest before the end of the season.
• Beat the heat in dry years. Quick-maturing cultivars avoid the competition for water in dry years. Quick-maturing crops can go into the garden early in the season and be replaced later by drought tolerant crops or not at all. You still get the vegetables you want to eat, but the plants' struggle to find water is avoided.
Here are quick-maturing vegetable cultivars:
Snap beans. Bush green:
Lima beans.
Beets.
Broccoli. Cruiser (58); Green Comet (60); Green Goliath (60); Premium Crop (60); Packman (55).
Cabbage. Charmant (52 days); Earliana (60 days); Early Jersey
Carrots. Baby Finger (50 days);
Cauliflower. Early Snowball (55 days); Snow Crown (60); Snow Grace (65); Snow King (45 days).
Chard. Burgundy (60); Rhubarb (60); Fordhook Giant (57); Lucullus (50); Rainbow (55).
Sweet corn. Bodacious (72); Early Xtra Sweet (79); Maple Sweet (70); Cotton Candy (72); Spring Snow (65); Sugar Snow (71).
Cucumbers. Slicing: Bush Crop (55); Fanfare (63); Salad Bush (57); Spacemaster (56); Straight Eight (65); Sweet Slice (63). Pickling: Calypso (50); Lucky Strike (52); National Pickling (55); SMR-53 (53).
Eggplant. Beauty (65 days); Burpee Hybrid (70); Dusky (56); Easter Egg (52 days); Ichiban (58 days); Millionaire (55 days); Violetta (65 days).
Endive, Frisse. Fine Curled (50 days); Salad King (46 days).
Kale. Dwarf Blue Curled Vates (55 days); Russian Red (40 days), Siberian (60 days); Verdura (60 days).
Kohlrabi. Early White
Lettuce. Green Leaf:
Melons. Alaska (65 days); Super 45 (45 days); Sweetie (65 days).
Mustard Greens. Curled: Fordhook Fancy (40 days); Giant Red (23 days); Green Wave (45 days); Kyona (40 days). Plain Leaf: Komatsuna (30 days); Tendergreen (34 days).
Oriental Mustard or Asian Greens: Bok Choy (45 days); Canton Dwarf Chinese Flat Cabbage (40 days); Gai Choy (45 days); Green-In-Snow (45 days); Mitsuba (60 days); Mizuna (36 days); Pak Choy (42 days); Tatsoi (45 days).
Okra. Annie Oakley (50); Dwarf Green Long Pod (52); Emerald (55); Clemson Spineless (56);
Onions. Bunching: Beltsville Bunching (65 days); Southport White Globe (65 days); White Buching (40 days); White Lisbon (60 days).
Peas. Early: Daybreak (54);
Peppers. Sweet:
Radishes. Burpee White (23); Champion (28); Cherry Belle (22); Comet (25 days); Early Scarlet Globe (23); Easter Egg (25).
Spinach.
Summer Squash. Scallop: Bennings Green Tint (54 days); Pattypan (55); Peter Pan (50 days); Scallopini (50 days); Sunburst (50 days). Straightneck: Early Prolific Straighneck (50); Early Yellow (50 days); Seneca Butterbar (50). Crookneck: Early Crookneck (53); Giant Crookneck (55 days); Yellow Crookneck (42 days). Zucchini, Green: Aristocrat (53); Chefini (48); President (50); Spineless Beauty (45). Zucchini, Cocozelle: Cousa (51 days); Florentino (47 days). Space Savers: Sundrops (45 days).
Tomatoes. Early: Alisa Craig (70 days); Early Girl (60); Bush Beefsteak (62 days); Champion (65); Moneymaker (70 days). Main Crop: Celebrity (70). Small Fruit: Green Grape (70 days); Large Red Cherry (70); Super Sweet 100 (70); Sweet 100 (70 days); Sweet Million (65); Yellow Pear (70). Container: Husky Gold (70); Patio Hybrid (65); Stupice (52 days); Tiny Tim (45).
Turnips. Golden Ball (60); Just Right (60);Market Express (38 days); Purple Top White Globe (55); Royal Crown (52);
Watermelon. Early Midget (65 days); Golden Midget (65 days); Sugar Baby (68 days).
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The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide
A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide details the very essentials to gain small crop prowess and expertise. Detailed growing guides for 80 vegetables and herbs including:
- Seed sowing, planting, and transplanting requirements.
- Site and seasonal growing requirements.
- Water, light, and nutrition requirements.
- Detailed growing characteristics: height, root depth, bloom time, and days to harvest.
- Best varieties for easy care and harvest.
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- Pest, disease, and environmental troubleshooting guide.
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- Propagation requirements.
- Greenhouse and coldframe growing suggestions to extend the season.
- Harvest and storage specifics.
- Plant origin and history.
- Identifying photograph of plant at harvest time.
- Brief description of how edible part is used in the kitchen.
- Common and botanical names for each plant listed alphabetically.
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I love growing those early maturing varieties. Golden zucchini's are awesome. They take half as long to finish as summer crookneck squash and taste every bit as good.
Golden zucchini squash can be planted in intervals and are extremely productive.
Hello Readers: I am looking for Fordhook Fancy (mustard) seeds. Does anyone know where I can buy them?? Thank you!